According to Tribe, former FBI Director James Comey should have kept it from the public when the investigation into Clinton’s email server was briefly reopened shortly before the election. The law professor accused Comey of concealing a similar investigation into Trump during the election, even though Comey himself testified in June that — unlike Clinton — Trump himself was not under FBI investigation.

“Retweet if you agree it’s totally crazy to suggest that the FBI — having helped sink Hillary’s campaign by revealing that she was under investigation while concealing that Trump was being investigated — has secretly been anti-Trump all along,” Tribe wrote.

Retweet if you agree it’s totally crazy to suggest that the FBI — having helped sink Hillary’s campaign by revealing that she was under investigation while concealing that Trump was being investigated — has secretly been anti-Trump all along.

Clinton and her supporters have consistently attacked the FBI’s credibility when it’s been in their political interests to do so. Then Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid accused Comey of violating the Hatch Act with his “partisan actions.”

“I am writing to inform you that my office has determined that these actions may violate the Hatch Act, which bars FBI officials from using their official authority to influence an election,” Reid said in a letter to Comey a week before the election. “Through your partisan actions, you may have broken the law.” Legal experts disputed Reid’s claim.

Two senior House Democrats, New York Rep. Jerrold Nadler and Maryland Democrat Elijah Cummings sent a letter to the Department of Justice earlier this month demanding any evidence of an anti-Clinton bias at the agency during the election.

In January, several prominent Democrats praised the Inspector General’s investigation into the FBI’s handling of political issues during the campaign.